When cold weather becomes a death sentence

When cold weather becomes a death sentence

As temperatures outside the DeKalb County Jail plunged into the teens, a tragedy was unfolding inside the Georgia jail.

Lamar Walker was begging for help and slowly freezing to death, according to a federal lawsuit filed by his family.

Walker, 34, was arrested in December 2022 on charges of aggravated assault and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, according tolocalmedia. Walker, who had been detained at the jail several times before, was experiencing a mental health crisis and tried to flush his clothes down the toilet, prompting staff to confiscate his clothing, according the lawsuit.

Anticipating the cold temperatures, a jail official directed employees to provide two blankets to inmates in the coldest cells. But Walker was given no blankets and left "completely naked and agitated," the lawsuit said.

Just eight days after his arrest, Walker was dead. Temperatures in his cell had reached 50 degrees, well below the 72 to 76 degrees required by jail policy, and an autopsy report found his cause of death was hypothermia, according to the lawsuit.

<p style=Much of the nation east of the Rocky Mountains is hunkered down for what could be the worst winter storm of the season, followed by some of the coldest temperatures seen in years. The storm began out of Texas and Oklahoma Friday evening, hitting the region with heavy sleet and snow. Forecasters have warned of "catastrophic" ice accumulation. On Saturday, the system is expected to push towards Virginia, dumping a foot of snow or more on parts of the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic, while New England sees double-digit subzero temperatures. See the dramatic scenes of frigid cold temperatures, beginning here with an image of a jogger on the John Seigenthaler Pedestrian Bridge in Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 24, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> National Guard vehicles are seen at the Starbucks parking lot on Union Avenue on Jan. 24, 2026, after a winter storm brought snow, sleet and ice to the Mid-South. The wintry blast was expected to continue through Jan. 26. Ollie Waterbury, 10, plays in the snow as he watches his dog Cloud run around at the Overton Park Shell in Memphis, Tenn., on January 24, 2026. Palm trees are swayed by harsh wind at Water's Edge Park in Corpus Christi, Texas, on Jan. 24, 2026. A strong cold front was expected to hit the Coastal Bend in the evening. People load up their vehicles with groceries as heavy rain falls at Walmart on Saratoga Boulevard in Corpus Christi, Texas, on Jan. 24, 2026. A snow plow passes down Commerce Ave. in Nashville, Tenn., Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. A winter storm brought snow and ice to Middle Tennessee on Saturday. National Guard vehicles are seen at the Starbucks parking lot on Union Avenue on Jan. 24, 2026, after a winter storm brought snow, sleet and ice to the Mid-South. The wintry blast was expected to continue through Jan. 26. A truck plows snow on Union Avenue on Jan. 24, 2026, after a winter storm brought snow, sleet and ice to the Mid-South. The wintry blast was expected to continue through Jan. 26. A family gets a photo in the snow outside of Madison@McLean in Memphis, Tenn., on January 24, 2026. A winter storm brought severe weather and frigid temperatures to Memphis late January 23rd. Union Avenue is seen covered in snow in Memphis, Tenn., on January 24, 2026. A winter storm brought severe weather and frigid temperatures to Memphis late January 23rd. A southwest flight takes off at Nashville International Airport as snow falls on January 24, 2026 in Nashville, Tennessee. A couple buys a kerosene space heater to help heat their home in preparation for a winter storm in Lewiston, Maine on January 24, 2026. Americans stripped supermarket shelves January 23 ahead of potentially New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks at a salt depot during a news conference about preparations for the winter storm in New York on January 24, 2026. Snow falls on 3rd Ave. in Nashville, Tenn., Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. A winter storm brought snow and ice to Middle Tennessee on Saturday.

See stunning photos from the massive winter storm blanketing the US

Much of the nation east of the Rocky Mountains is hunkered down for what could bethe worst winter storm of the season, followed by some of the coldest temperatures seen in years. The storm began out of Texas and Oklahoma Friday evening, hitting the region with heavy sleet and snow. Forecasters have warned of "catastrophic" ice accumulation. On Saturday, the system is expected to push towards Virginia, dumping a foot of snow or more on parts of the Ohio Valley and Mid-Atlantic, while New England sees double-digit subzero temperatures. See the dramatic scenes of frigid cold temperatures, beginning here with an image of a jogger on the John Seigenthaler Pedestrian Bridge in Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 24, 2026.

"Despite Lamar's fragile mental health condition and his calls for help from the inhumane environment in which he was kept, none of the Defendants took any action to protect him from the cold or to prevent his discomfort and death," the lawsuit said. "In fact, the Defendants did just the opposite – they willfully and maliciously rejected and ignored him."

The DeKalb County Sheriff's Office, which operates the jail, declined to comment citing pending litigation. Attorneys for the employees named in the lawsuit and Walker's family did not respond to a request for comment from USA TODAY.

Inmates across the country have died or been hospitalized due to hypothermia, sparking lawsuits, criminal charges and watchdog reports that raise concerns about how well jails and prisons respond to the cold.

While much attention on how extreme temperatures affect inmates has focused on heat andU.S. winters are getting warmer,someresearchsuggests climate change may also fuel more extreme winter weather,including heavy snowfall, which has the potential to knock out power in facilities with aging infrastructure and vulnerable populations.

Rolls of blankets and sheets sit ready for use at the new Minnehaha County Jail building on in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

America's cold prison problem

Dozens of currently and formerlyincarcerated people across the country have sharedwith researchers and media outlets their accounts of frigid showers, threadbare clothing and temperatures so low that they can see their breath inside their cells throughout the winter.

Even if a prison has a heating system, it often isn't able to warm all parts of the facility quickly and adequately, said Ben Barron, author of astudyon the climate risks to prison infrastructure in Colorado. "These buildings are not built to do anything beyond keep a population contained and controlled," Barron said.

Many inmates told Barron's team they had to purchase warmer clothing from the commissary. Some found makeshift ways to protect themselves from the cold, like wetting the edges of windows so they would freeze and create a seal to keep cold air out.

"It felt like because it was so cold at times in the winter that I would have every piece of clothing I had on…and also be afraid to go to sleep at night because it felt like it was so cold that I would not wake up," one man told Barron's team, according to the group's report.

As the eastern United States enduresa frigid February, advocates for incarcerated people are bracing for the annual influx of complaints about a lack of heating and warm clothing, problems that can be exacerbated by temporary crises like power outages during a storm. They say the conditions could be considered "cruel and unusual punishment" prohibited by the Eighth Amendment, much like the sweltering conditions in prisons without air conditioning.

"That definitely could violate the Eighth Amendment or the 14th Amendment because that's gratuitous punishment," said Corene Kendrick, deputy director of the ACLU's National Prison Project. "Whether it's done more out of negligence because it's an old building or the like and so the heat's not working versus purposefully setting it excessively cold."

Climate change could fuel extreme winter weather

Global temperatures are rising but nowhere is getting hotter faster than the Arctic.

As the temperature difference between the Arctic and the areas further south shrinks, the jet stream, which acts as a buffer between them, gets weaker, according toJennifer Francisof theWoodwell Climate Research Center.A weak jet stream could allow frigid Arctic air to plunge further south and stick around longer than usual, she said, though that theory isbeing debated among scientistsanda causal link has not been definitively proven.

"We tend to see longer stretches of cold in the winter or longer stretches of storminess or longer stretches of abnormal heat even," Francis said. "And we've seen that very clearly displayed this winter so far."

An influx of Arctic air was responsible for a deadly Texas cold snap in February 2021, Francis said. During that winter storm, about a third of Texas prisons lost power and about the same amount of facilities had low or no running water,the Texas Tribune reported.

And while many states say their facilities have heating capabilities, they aim to keep their prisons at a certain temperature during the winter and they provide warm clothes or blankets, inmate experiences vary widely, particularly in parts of the country that are less accustomed to dealing with winter weather. A survey of 563 inmates in California found over half said they lacked access to heated facilities during extreme cold weather, according toa 2023 report from the Ella Baker Center.

"It can strike kind of anywhere," Francis said. "So anywhere that's not prepared for extreme cold is going to suffer more than places that are."

How cold kills inside

Cold kills more people than heatin the U.S. and cold in prison can be particularly deadly.

A 2024studyof more than 18,000 deaths in prisons during cold months found the cumulative effect of an extreme cold day was associated with an 11% increase in mortality and a 55% increase in suicides. The greatest increase in deaths occurred in prisons built before 1980, located in the South or West, and operating as a dedicated medical facility.

"Cold-related deaths often occur on moderately cool days, not only during extreme events, and most are tied to worsening of chronic conditions rather than hypothermia itself,"Shady Abohashem, of Mass General Brigham Heart and Vascular Institute,previously told USA TODAY.

Hypothermiasets in when body temperature drops below 95 degrees. While the dangerous condition is often associated with being outside in the snow or plunging into freezing waters, it can occur indoors if the conditions are right, according to theCleveland Clinic.

"If you're wet, poorly nourished, or inadequately clothed on top of not having enough heat, you'll get colder much faster - and the faster hypothermia can occur," emergency medicine physician Thomas Waters said in a statement.

Certain medical conditions and factors like age can also make people more susceptible to the cold. Nearly 1 in 6 prisoners are 55 and older ‒ a significant increase since the turn of the century ‒ according to areportfrom the American Civil Liberties Union and the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab at the University of Texas at Austin.

A disproportionate number ofincarcerated people also have a history of mental illness, and someresearchsuggests certain anti-psychotic medications can raise the risk of hypothermia. In 2024,the Associated Pressreported that inmates at a Virginia facility that predominantly holds mentally ill offenders were hospitalized for hypothermia at least 13 times over the course of three years.

Kyle Gibson, a spokesperson for the Virginia Department of Corrections, said he could not confirm that report. Gibson said four inmates at the Marion Correctional Treatment Center have been hospitalized with hypothermia since 2020 and in three cases, the hypothermia was "a symptom of another medical issue."

Cruel and unusual punishment?

The Supreme Court has suggestedthat low cell temperatures combined with a failure to provide blankets could constitute an Eighth Amendment violation. Barron said the crumbling carceral infrastructure he studied regularly crossed this threshold.

"A core piece of our argument was that this amounts to cruel and unusual punishment precisely because people on the inside don't have much agency to respond to extreme conditions," he said.

Litigation in state courtshas found extreme heat in prisons to be unconstitutional.A stringof lawsuits related to hypothermia deaths in prisonstretches back at least two decades, and inmates have had some success holding officials accountable for extremely cold conditions and pushing for change.

Recently, lawyers for people incarcerated at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York, during a weeklong blackoutsecured a $10 million settlement from the government."Longstanding temperature regulation issues" resulted in "significant" problems with heat in the facility asoutdoor temperatures plunged into the single digits,according toreportfrom the Justice Department's Office of the Inspector General.

After a watchdog report raised concerns aboutthe deaths of two people in custodywho experienced "symptoms consistent with hypothermic arrest," the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors passed amotionin 2023 asking jail officials to give out more thermal clothing.

But there have been setbacks, too.Former Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin vetoed a bill in Marchthat would have required heat, as well as air conditioning, be provided in state correctional facilities and that temperature be kept between 65 and 80 degrees.

"This bill imposes a costly mandate without assessing the financial and operational burdens on the Department of Corrections," Youngkin said in astatement at the time."Furthermore, existing Department of Corrections data does not substantiate the claims of extreme temperatures or health risks used to justify this legislation."

Due to budget concerns, Del. Holly Seibold of Fairfax County said she's not planning to reintroduce the legislation but is hoping to convince the department of corrections to make changes internally. At this point, Seibold said, she'd settle for just providing heavier blankets but more substantive changes are what inmates really need.

"Unless we really invest in the infrastructure of the old prisons in particular, it's not going to change," she said.

Contributing: Doyle Rice

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Cold weather can turn a stay in jail into a death sentence

 

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